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- iHaveNet.com: Politics
by Clarence Page
May 2, 2011
Surprise, surprise! Faced with the prospect of
Seventy percent of those who identified themselves as supporters of the fiscally-conservative movement in a new McClatchy-Marist poll oppose cuts to
Almost as many, 68 percent, of those who simply call themselves "conservatives" also opposed the cuts. A much larger portion, 88 percent, of moderates and 91 percent of liberals opposed laying finger on the two health care programs.
But what about those tea partiers? What happened, I wonder, to all that budget-cutting, thrifty government zealotry and deficit hawkishness that spurred the tea party movement into existence?
What happened to all those fears of a single-payer national health care system? Or does nobody notice anymore that
A similarly surprising outpouring of affection from the right turned up in a
Asked if they think
That's almost the same as the 45 percent yes of Republicans overall who say, yes, it's worth it while 44 percent say no.
Overall, 61 percent of those surveyed say yes, including 78 percent of Democrats and 57 percent of independents.
On the larger philosophical of whether government has the responsibility to provide health care coverage for the elderly or the poor, 76 percent of the Americans surveyed said yes to the elderly and 56 percent say yes to the poor.
But here conservatives were split. Republicans, at 55 percent, were more likely than tea party supporters, at 47 percent, to say it's the government's responsibility to provide health care to the elderly while 48 percent of tea partiers and only 40 percent of Republicans overall said it was not. It's a tribute to
President Lyndon B. Johnson, the program's architect, would smile at how far we have come since 1961 when a certain politically minded Hollywood actor recorded an attack against government health care for the elderly titled, "Ronald Reagan Speaks Out Against Socialized Medicine."
Recording on what we old-timers used to call a vinyl "record," children, the 10-minute speech featured Reagan's manly honey-toned voice criticizing the idea of government health care for the elderly as "subsidized medicine" that would "curtail Americans' freedom."
By 1980, Reagan had migrated politically to the other side of that debate, even insisting as a presidential candidate that he had never opposed "the principle of providing care" for senior citizens.
Today
Politically, that sounds like bad news for Republicans and good news for Democrats. A deficit-reduction budget passed recently by House Republicans calls for major changes in
President Obama, by contrast, mainly wants to stick with his Affordable Care Act, which Republicans want to repeal. Now he, too, is running into problems with key tenets like its
The panel of 15 experts would be nominated by the president to recommend policies that would cut
People, if we're going to get this deficit under control, something's got to give. It's best if the sacrifice is shared. There's plenty of pain to go around.
One hopeful sign: Polls show younger people, the generation most likely to be effected by whatever reforms win the Washington argument, are more amenable to big
That's appropriate. Since young folks have to live with the outcome, they should have the biggest say. Yet, ironically younger voters are the least likely to turn out for elections. If ever there was a time for them to get off the couch and make their feelings known, this is it.
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